Have a Koch

Journalist: The People behind the Push for War

Extended interview with German journalist.

In an amazing pattern developing very recently of celebrities and
mainstream figures coming out with the truth, extremely popular German
journalist Udo Ulfkotte admitted that the corporate media of the West
completely bows down to the wealthy, to corporate interests, and to the
lies perpetuated by extremely powerful people.

Journalist: Working for the CIA & NATO

Members of the German media are paid by the CIA in return for
spinning the news in a way that supports US interests, and some German
outlets are nothing more than PR appendages of NATO, according to a new book by Udo Ulfkotte, a former editor of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, one of Germany's largest newspapers.

Ulfkotte is a serious mainstream journalist. Here he is on Germany's leading political talk show
a couple of years ago. The book is a sensation in Germany, #7 on the
bestseller list. Its political dynamite, coming on the heels of German
outrage of NSA tapping of their phones. Check out the RT.com story on
it in the video below.

Here at Russia Insider,
it has long been apparent to us that there is something distinctly odd
about the German media regarding Russia. We follow it, and it is much
more strident than even the anglo-saxon media regarding Russia, while
German public opinion is much more positive towards Russia than in other
countries.

Another interesting thing about it is that it is
very disparate. Some major voices are very reasonable about Russia, but
most are negative, and some are comically apocalyptic. This is what
one would expect if there was some financial influence ginning the
system.

We've been talking about this for a while now. German
public opinion is becoming more and more fed up with the what they
increasingly believe to be a rigged media, and its starting to come out
everywhere.

The allegations, while shocking, are consistent with the CIA's long and well-established history of media infiltration.

Operation Mockingbird, which began in the 1950s, was a secret CIA operation
which recruited journalists to serve as mouthpieces for the American
government. The program was officially terminated after it was exposed
by the famous Church Committee investigations, but evidence of ongoing CIA influence over the media continues to accumulate.

Just last week Glenn Greenwald's (of Edward Snowden fame) new groundbreaking investigative website, The Intercept,
charged that the CIA leveraged its considerable influence - some might
even say friendship - with media in order to discredit Gary Webb, the
fearless American journalist who uncovered CIA cocaine trafficking as
part of the Iran-Contra scandal of the 1980s.

On September 18, the agency released a trove of
documents spanning three decades of secret government operations.
Culled from the agency’s in-house journal, Studies in Intelligence, the
materials include a previously unreleased six-page article titled “Managing a Nightmare: CIA Public Affairs and the Drug Conspiracy Story.”
Looking back on the weeks immediately following the publication of
“Dark Alliance,” the document offers a unique window into the CIA’s
internal reaction to what it called “a genuine public relations crisis”
while revealing just how little the agency ultimately had to do to
swiftly extinguish the public outcry.

Thanks in part to
what author Nicholas Dujmovic, a CIA Directorate of Intelligence staffer
at the time of publication, describes as “a ground base of already
productive relations with journalists,” the CIA’s Public Affairs
officers watched with relief as the largest newspapers in the country
rescued the agency from disaster, and, in the process, destroyed the
reputation of an aggressive, award-winning reporter.

Protesting Endless War

Friday, October 31, 2014

Protest at Obama Rally in Portland

Just over a dozen people gathered in a peace protest yesterday in Portland, Maine as several thousand mostly Democrats lined up to get into a political rally that was headlined by Barack Obama. We have a tight race for governor in our state and the Democrat Mike Michaud (who I am voting for) invited the president to come and help whip up support amongst loyal party faithful and on-lookers.

I got there at 4:00 pm and worked the front of the crowd as folks got into the very long line to enter. Other protesters arrived after a while and eventually I got someone to help me hold the banner calling for conversion of the military industrial complex. We stayed until 6:30 pm... people were still in line when we left. The protest was organized by CodePink Maine.

In the news spot above my short interview comes up at four minutes into the report. I tried to make factual and moral appeals to the public. One thing I repeatedly said was that we need the 'liberal Democrats' to call on both Republicans and Democrats in Washington to end war spending so that we can deal with climate change and growing global poverty.

Another rap I made to folks was that when George W. Bush was president we would get hundreds, and often thousands, to protests held outside places where he spoke. But after Obama got elected most liberal Democrats quit on the peace movement because they didn't want to have to protest their own party's war policy - which has turned out to be virtually identical to the Bush policy. I told the crowd that the choir wasn't singing the song - in fact the choir isn't in the church anymore!

It was well worth the time I put into it - you don't often get that kind of captive audience - it was an organizers dream come true.

Washington's Syria Confusion

Washington is now reaching out to Moscow and Tehran for ways to
negotiate with the Assad government - after years of shunning diplomacy
with Syria. That's according to US Secretary of State John Kerry.

Jeju: The Beloved Community

Catholic Worker Art Laffin (2nd from left) reports from Jeju Island, South Korea. Also in the photo (in red jacket in center) is Yang Yoon-Mo who has been jailed several times and nearly died during successive hunger strikes from prison.

Art Laffin lives and works at the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker House in Washington DC. Back in the 1990's he used to come to Florida to help us organize protests at the space center. For many years he has held weekly vigils at the Pentagon and White House.

Dear Friends,

Today was a rainy day in Gangjeong village. At 7 a.m. Fr. Pat Cunningham and I
joined several other friends for the daily bowing ritual at the main entrance
of the new naval base under construction. As a Buddhist meditation about peace
and compassion is recited over a sound system, 100 full prostrate bows are
done. I stood and bowed as my knees ain't what they used to be. As the rain
fell, my meditation brought me back some 37 years ago as I recalled the Thames
River in New London/Groton being dredged so that the soon to be Trident
submarines would not scrape the river bottom. Yesterday, I saw massive cranes
dredging the port where this new naval base in under construction. God forgive
this unspeakable desecration in which the U.S. is fully complicit!

After the ritual, Fr. Pat took me on a trail where I could see another side of
the base being built. The trail stretched alongside a small stream that fed
into the beautiful South China Sea. As I was told yesterday, and was reminded
again today, the ancient Gureombi rock formation is now nonexistent, as it was
blasted away two years ago. In the March 2014 issue of the Gangjeong Village
Story newsletter, the lead article lamented the second anniversary of the destruction
of this sacred formation: "For thousands of years, Gureombi has been a
playground, a garden, and a mother's arms, embracing and embraced by the people
of Gangjeong. Thus it was perhaps the most painful and sorrowful moment of this
eight year struggle to experience the partial destruction of the Gureombi Rock.
Still, though we cannot see Gureombi anymore, it lives on in our
memories."

My friend, Fr. Pat, who has been an enormous help to me, departed for the
mainland later in the morning. I then attended the daily 11 a.m. Eucharist at
the main entrance of the construction site, where I sat next to Fr. Mun,
the renowned and revered peacemaker. The reign of God was truly at hand as rain
came down for most of the Mass. Like yesterday, those were sitting directly in
the path where vehicles enter and exit, were moved several times out of the way
by police. Shortly afterwards, those who were moved went back to their blocking
positions. Like yesterday, no arrest were made for this action. As the caravan of
cement and supply trucks entered and exited the site, I pondered how the needs
of countless poor could be met if the resources going into this site could be
redirected.

Right before the sign of peace, Fr. Mun always sings a beautiful prayer for
peace. He later commented to me that he often feels like crying whenever he
sings the song. At the end of the Mass, Fr. Mun, conveyed to me what a beautiful
Mass it was. He said: "this is our church--in the streets." Following
the Mass the gathered community prayed the rosary. When the rosary was
finished, a human chain was formed by about 30 people at the main entrance of
the site. I was much honored to be asked to sing several songs during this
time. When the human chain ended, all gathered broke out into a synchronized
dance that was most impressive. Even though there was a heavy rain, this did
not dampen the spirits of those dancing. Rather, the people danced with even
more spirit and swagger. It was truly an amazing sight to behold!

Later in the afternoon, I was interviewed by a longtime activist and writer who
is doing a story about the Catholic Worker for a progressive Catholic
publication in South Korea called "Now and Here." Part of the reason
she was doing the story was that several Catholic Workers have previously come
to Jeju and she was very interested to know why. She also wanted to know more
about the Catholic Worker, my involvement in it, and why I had come to Jeju. We
had a great two hour interview which included a translator.

The rain has stopped. I am so grateful to be here. I carry all of you who read
this in my heart and prayers. Thank you for your loving support and prayers.
Please pray for all those who are resisting the construction of the new naval
base here. Thank you for all you are doing to help create Beloved Community.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Manufacturing Food in the Lab

SynBio Explained

Video Animation Explores Risks of Treating Life as a Machine

Montreal,

29 Oct. 2014–On the eve of the largest annual gathering of synthetic biologists in the world, ETC Group and the Bioeconomies Media Project are launching a new animated explanation of the workings of this emerging “SynBio” industry, often dubbed extreme genetic engineering. Thousands of scientists, students and vendors will converge at the International Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) Jamboree in Boston to share the latest advancements in what has become a multi billion dollar industry based on the industrialization of life at the molecular level.

Increasingly, scientists and civil society are sounding the alarm about the risks posed by unregulated commercialization of SynBio’s untested, experimental and unprecedented manipulation of life forms. The new ten minute video, produced in collaboration with award-winning Canadian animator Marie-Josée Saint-Pierre and narrated by ETC’s Jim Thomas, is the first output from a new Bioeconomies Media Project. Featuring work of researchers from Canadian universities and funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the video provides a succinct introduction to the science and emerging industry of synthetic biology as well as some of the ethical, biosafety and economic impacts that these "genetically engineered machines" may have.

"The synthetic biology industry is already a multibillion dollar enterprise involving some of the worlds largest food, chemical and agribusiness companies," said Jim Thomas, ETC's Programme Director. "The leaders of that industry are targeting markets supplied by small farmers in the around the world; this is likely to have real negative impacts on poorer communities in the global south."

SynBio companies have commercialized several products already, including a vanilla substitute grown by synthetically modified yeast, a coconut oil replacement produced by engineered algae, and engineered versions of patchouli and vetiver fragrances. Less than two weeks ago, 194 nations at the United Nations convention on Biological Diversity unanimously urged governments to establish precautionary regulations and to assess synthetic biology organisms, components and products. Many countries had called for a complete global moratorium on the release of synthetic biology organisms.

"Small farmers feed over 70% of the world; if SynBio companies cut into the tiny profits they are able to make, it could have a growing negative impact on the world's food supply," Thomas added. "Given how little we know about the potential effects of these highly novel life forms, there are also concerns about the risk of synthetic microorganisms escaping into the air and water."

The video released today features the work of Montreal-based animator Marie-Josée Saint-Pierre, who has dozens of film festival awards to her name, most recently for Best Short Documentary at the Saint Louis International Film Festival in 2012. Saint Pierre’s last animation was featured at the most recent Cannes International Film Festival.

"Since I started working on this video, I've learned that synthetic biology is quite dangerous, and without regulations it can have repercussions for workers and farmers," said Saint-Pierre. "It was important for me to make something that’s easy to understand, so that anyone can access information about SynBio and process it."

Space Launch Privatization Costing Taxpayers Dearly

An Orbital
Sciences Corp. rocket carrying a cargo spacecraft on a
mission to the International Space Station (ISS) exploded seconds after
liftoff on October 28. The Antares rocket lifted off from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport at Wallops Island,
Virginia. Approximately ten seconds after liftoff, however, an explosion
took place at the base of the rocket’s first stage. The rocket fell
back to the ground near the launch pad, triggering a second, larger
explosion.

Reports from Orbital were that the cargo module was carrying hazardous materials and they warned residents to avoid any contact with debris. That could mean many things including radioactive materials were onboard - one thing you can be sure of - neither Orbital nor NASA will inform the public what the 'hazardous materials' really are.

The mission, valued at more than $200 million, is part of the Obama administration's program of privatization of launch services. Orbital has a $1.9 billion contract to launch eight such missions to the ISS in the coming years. This ill-fated mission was the third.

There appears to be on-going problems with the engines on the Antares rocket. Last May when the engine was tested at the NASA Stennis Space Center in Mississippi there was an explosion and a $17.5 million loss.

US launch services are turning out to be highly problematic. Since NASA retired the shuttle program in 2011 the space agency has had to rely on the Russians to ferry astronauts to the ISS. (The ISS cost taxpayers $100 billion to build.) Orbital and Space X have been awarded the contracts to transport supplies to the space station. Luckily for NASA and the present international crew of six astronauts on the ISS the Russians were planning a cargo resupply launch on October 29. If that launch goes haywire the six astronauts could be hurting.

The Russians have given NASA notice that they will stop transports to the ISS in 2020. After that the US will have to figure it out for themselves. One Russian leader suggested that NASA use a trampoline to get astronauts to the ISS.

Last night I was called by RT and did an interview about this launch accident via Skype. In the interview I was asked why the US had privatized the NASA launch program. My response was that the aerospace industry is eager to make space operations a profit generating enterprise by having the taxpayers pay them to venture into the heavens. The corporations are particularly eager to advance space technology to the point that they can begin space mining operations. There were apparently some experiments on the cargo re-supply mission that had to do with asteroid mining.

Aerospace corporation lawyers are very active these days trying to rewrite the U.N.'s Moon and Outer Space Treaties that forbid individuals, corporations, or particular countries from claiming ownership of the planetary bodies. So the agenda is clear - privatize space operations and rewrite space law to allow the aerospace industry to claim ownership of the heavens. But clearly they want the taxpayers to pay the freight charges.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Amtrak Goes Spy Crazy

Are you nervous or calm on a train? Do you look around when you're on
the phone or stare straight ahead? Are you the first to leave the train
or do you loiter behind other passengers? Well, you better know the
answer to these questions otherwise the US National Train Service
"Amtrak" will report you to the cops. RT's Marina Portnaya explains what
classifies as "suspicious activity".

My Techno Talk in NYC

Space Technology’s Role in Corporate

Full Spectrum Dominance

I live in Bath, Maine where Navy destroyers are built. These ships are outfitted with so-called “missile defense” systems that the Pentagon is today using to help surround Russia and China. Few people in my community, including activists, are interested in where these ships go or what their military mission is. It’s not popular to raise these questions – especially when Bath Iron Works is the largest industrial employer in our state.

In the US today 59% of every federal discretionary tax dollar goes to the Pentagon to fund the cancerous war machine. Our communities have become addicted to military spending as our physical and social infrastructure continues to deteriorate. There is virtually no money for anything else these days as we witness austerity cuts in social programs all around the globe.

The Pentagon says that America’s role under corporate globalization of the world economy will be “security export.” We won’t have conventional jobs making things useful to our communities; instead we will build weapons for endless war and send our kids overseas to die for the oil corporations.

In fact, today weapons are the number one industrial export of the US. And when weapons are your number one industrial export product, what is your global marketing strategy for that product line? What does it say about the soul of our nation that we have to keep selling weapons and killing people in order to provide jobs so workers can feed their families?

In addition to coordinating the Global Network I am a member of Veterans For Peace, and just days ago we completed a low-tech 125-mile walk across parts of our state that we called Walk for Peace & a Sustainable Future. Increasingly, the only real job investment money coming into Maine (and across the nation) from the federal government is for military weapons production. Now, nearly 10% of Maine’s economy is reliant on weapons contracts.

We began the walk up in the beautiful mountain and lakes region called Rangeley where the Pentagon’s ‘Missile Defense Agency’ is considering putting up to 60 so-called ‘missile defense interceptors,’ which, in fact, are key elements in US first-strike attack planning and are aimed at Russia and China. Narrow, winding roads would have to be bulldozed and widened and huge holes would have to be blasted into the mountains in order to insert the missile silos. Toxic rocket fuel would be trucked in and stored – the same rocket fuel that is now contaminating water sources in 22 states across the nation. The whole plan would be an environmental disaster and would cost taxpayers more than $4 billion.

This program is an important illustration of how the nation increasingly puts blind faith in space technology to fight modern wars.

Come to find out the Pentagon didn’t want this expensive program, but pressure on Congress from the Boeing Corporation forced it to go forward with an environmental impact statement process and public hearings in four states (including Maine) to select an ‘east coast deployment’ site for the missile defense base.

Another major weapons program being built that the Pentagon did not actually want is also in Bath, Maine. General Dynamics Corporation owns Bath Iron Works where destroyers for the Navy are built. The standard destroyers cost $1.5 billion each and are outfitted with another version of these ‘missile defense’ interceptor missiles – which have had much success in their testing program. But after Obama became president he forced the Pentagon to build the new high-tech ‘stealth’ destroyer called the Zumwalt the job of which is to sneak up on China and blast it with electro-magnetic rail guns and other weapons systems. This is part of Obama’s ‘pivot’ of 60% of US military forces into the Asia-Pacific to provocatively confront and control China.

As it turns out the majority stockholders in General Dynamics are the Crown family in Chicago who helped Obama get elected to the presidency. So he owed them, and the new Zumwalt stealth destroyer, at a cost to taxpayers of between 4 and 6 billion dollars per copy, is their reward.

As part of the US pivot to China the Pentagon needs more airfields for warplanes, barracks for troops, and ports of call for the warships being re-deployed into the Asia-Pacific. So in places like Jeju Island, South Korea we see a 500-year-old farming and fishing culture being torn apart and UNESCO-recognized world- heritage soft coral reefs just offshore being destroyed as a naval base is being built for US nuclear subs, aircraft carriers and the destroyers made in my hometown of Bath.

Endangered coral reefs in the Philippines, Australia, Hawaii, Okinawa, and other places are similarly being severely impacted by US military expansion across the region. The Global Network is working hard to build international support for the local struggles against US military devastation of the environment and way of life of these communities.

The Pentagon has the largest carbon boot print on the planet… but sadly, there is little acknowledgement of that fact by most climate change groups, which well illustrates the “off limits” nature of the growing military domination of our society.

Some environmental leaders have told me over the years that they don’t want to negatively impact their ‘positive working relationship’ with Democrats in Congress by taking on the more controversial military issues, which most Democrats fully support because they bring jobs to their districts.

We have become an occupied nation. The corporate oligarchy that runs the show in Washington uses space-based technologies to spy on us and to direct all warfare on the planet. In a way, you could call today’s expensive military satellites the “triggers” that make the high-tech weapons like drones and missiles work. These satellites allow the military to see everything, hear everything, and to target virtually every place on the planet.

The military industrial complex has become the primary resource-extraction service for corporate capitalism and is preparing future generations for its dead end street of endless war.

In the US, approximately 40% of all scientists, engineers and technical professionals currently work in the military sector. This is a colossal waste of talent and intellectual resources as we face the coming reality of climate change.

Due to the fiscal crisis across the nation, engineering, computer science, mathematics, astronomy, and chemistry departments in colleges and universities have become increasingly dependent on Pentagon funding. We are sold the line that high-tech robotic war will save American lives and will be a cheaper way to fight.

One key reason for the militarization of space is resource extraction on the planetary bodies. The aerospace industry says they need nuclear power in space for mining the sky. International space law is now being re-written to allow corporate control of the planetary bodies. The plan is to scrap the United Nations Moon and Outer Space Treaties.

Rovers on Mars are powered with plutonium-238. I organized campaigns to oppose nuclear launches in 1989, 1990, and 1997. Space entrepreneur Elon Musk says we must move our civilization to Mars. The Mars Society says the Earth “is a rotting, stinking, dieing planet” and that we have to move to Mars. Imagine how much money that would cost?

The militarization of everything around us is a spiritual sickness. Lakota holy man Lame Deer talked about the green frog skin – the dollar bill – and how the white man was blinded by his love for the paper money. His spiritual connection to Mother Earth was broken.

In 1877, the great Lakota warrior Crazy Horse was brought onto the reservation in South Dakota as the Indian wars came to an end. Along with the end of the Civil War just 12 years earlier the military industrial complex at the time saw an end to its massive war profits. It needed an enemy to keep the military production lines humming. So a strategy was developed: Journalists and artists were paid to fabricate stories about Crazy Horse breaking out of the reservation and going back on the warpath killing innocent white children, raping white women, and burning their houses to the ground. These stories were printed in major papers across the nation and the American people were afraid and outraged. Congress swung into action and appropriated more money for weapons production, while Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull sat inside their tepees on the reservation without a gun to their names.

Similarly in our times we’ve seen the military industrial complex fabricate stories about ‘weapons of mass destruction’ in Iraq, and today we see ISIS (which was trained, armed, funded and directed by the CIA and Saudi Arabia) as the justification for the US to get back into Iraq and bomb Syria.

Studies by the economics department at UMASS-Amherst show that military spending creates the fewest jobs – while spending on solar, rail, wind turbines, education, health care, or repairing sewer and water systems and our roads and bridges creates more jobs with the same amount of money.

Abolitionist Frederick Douglas reminded us that power concedes nothing without a demand. When it comes to our current evil economic system, called militarism, we should be talking about its conversion and the jobs that would result from that transformation.

Good jobs can be created by home weatherization and building rail systems that get us out of our gas guzzling cars. Legions of unemployed workers can be hired to run town and city organic gardens. As we reject our military industrial base we lessen the impact of the war machine on our lives.

Without massive cuts in the Pentagon budget now we cannot kickstart our needed social redirection.

The integration of the economic conversion issue into the existing work of the peace, environmental, labor, and social justice movements could be a transformative strategy that would unify our disparate efforts and provide the despondent American people with a positive vision for the future. We don’t have any time to waste.